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A couple of articles this morning highlight the successful starts that some of the new rental buildings in Downtown Brooklyn are off to. First off, The Brooklyn Eagle reports that the Avalon Fort Greene, a 631-unit building at the corner of Flatbush and Myrtle Avenues, has rented 176 apartments since September, more than 100 of which are already occupied. Phil Wharton, VP at developer AvalonBay, sums up the rationale for the project’s location: In our minds, the transportation is excellent, the employment base is extensive, between 50,000 and 60,000, the nearby student population (and its faculty members) are significant, and there’s a connection with some great neighborhoods, like DUMBO, Boerum Hill, Brooklyn Heights and Fort Greene, which has a great community feel to it. A couple of blocks away at 111 Lawrence Street, 90 out of a total 491 units at The Brooklyner have been rented since marketing began at the end of last year; studios at the building, Brooklyn’s tallest, start at $1,450. The marketing agent for the 512-unit BKLYN GOLD on Gold and Tillary Streets doesn’t cough up the number of rented apartments, saying only that they’ve “had a tremendous response.” As you may recall, we guesstimated and crowd-sourced the news that 80 Dekalb is more than 25% rented. In all, according to the Downtown Brooklyn Partnership, there should be 5,000 new units on line by the end of next year. There’s even some good news in the Downtown condo market: The Oro has signed 37 new contracts since slashing prices in the autumn; 145 out of 303 units are now sold or in contract.
New Buildings Coming On Strongt [NY Post]
Avalon Fort Greene Rental Apartments Take Off [Brooklyn Eagle]


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

  1. @lossforwords – I also signed a lease in the building, and now am getting anxious about how they don’t yet have their TCO and I may not be able to move in for my Feb 1 lease start date. Are you also supposed to move in Feb 1?

  2. The Brooklyn Gold has yet to obtain their TCO. They may not reveal how many apartments are rented because their tenants have been in storage since mid December.

    Renter beware, be sure to ask about the TCO before signing your lease.

  3. “to OWN that 1 bedroom for sale on 9th Street yesterday for $2100 a month”

    That’s the cost if you get your 20% downpayment back. If prices drop 20% or worse, you will pay closer to $3000/mo or more after amortizing your loss and adding it in to that 2100/mo.

    “I’m only renting for a short period of time”

    Still better than purchasing for 15 to 20 x that annual rent.

    ***Bid half off peak comps***

  4. i hear ya lossforwords

    i think alot of people would find a W/D unit and a dishwasher a lot more useful than ‘period details’

    too bad renters in brooklyn typically can’t have the best of both worlds.

  5. Thanks 11217.

    Stargazer, very true, very cookie cutter design, but I’m only renting for a short period of time, why should I care?

    The kitchen, well it looked a lot better (not to mention more efficient in design) than what I have now. Plus it has a dishwasher so finally after 11 years of living in NYC I can get with modern times. But what sold me is the washer dryer in the unit. But if you think the kitchen is ugly, that’s ok. Everyone’s entitled to their own opinion.

  6. >> Most companies take the most qualified candidates.

    > actually that is totally not true at ALL. maybe modeling
    > agencies do, but no one else does.

    Rob is living proof of his own theory.

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